Are Carbon Taxes Another False Solution?

- by Mike Ewall, Ener­gy Jus­tice Network
Octo­ber 2014

Car­bon tax­es are emerg­ing as a major top-down cli­mate solu­tion envi­ros would like to see come out of Con­gress.  Plen­ty of “tax car­bon” signs were present in the 400,000-strong People’s Cli­mate March in New York City last month.  Even U.N. Sec­re­tary-Gen­er­al Ban Ki-moon is urg­ing nations to adopt either a car­bon tax, or the (failed and prob­lem­at­ic) “cap-and-trade” mod­el.  Cap-and-trade approach­es enrich Wall Street spec­u­la­tors, can con­cen­trate pol­lu­tion in vul­ner­a­ble com­mu­ni­ties that lack polit­i­cal clout, and fail to tru­ly reduce car­bon emis­sions, yet ele­vate lots of sketchy and cli­mate-dam­ag­ing false solu­tions from burn­ing tox­ic land­fill gas­es to run­ning Indige­nous peo­ple off of their forest­ed lands.

Sad­ly, car­bon tax pro­pos­als are rid­dled with prob­lems as well, mak­ing it a “solu­tion” we can’t sup­port.  Real solu­tions would end cor­po­rate agri­cul­ture and dirty ener­gy sub­si­dies (includ­ing mas­sive spend­ing on impe­r­i­al mil­i­tary adven­tures) and spell out poli­cies that reg­u­late and man­date what is actu­al­ly need­ed to trans­form the agri­cul­ture, ener­gy, materials/waste, and trans­porta­tion sec­tors into sus­tain­able cli­mate solu­tions.  Instead, car­bon tax­es focus on one sec­tor (ener­gy) and hope that the mar­ket will choose the right solu­tions in the right time frame for all sec­tors.  It’s just as like­ly to ele­vate false solu­tions like nuclear pow­er, bio­fu­els, bio­mass and waste incin­er­a­tion.  Some pro­pos­als explic­it­ly pro­mote some of these false solu­tions.  If not struc­tured prop­er­ly, a car­bon tax can also be regres­sive (harm­ing the poor more).

In June 2013, we put togeth­er an Open Let­ter to Cit­i­zens Cli­mate Lob­by, signed by 86 orga­ni­za­tions in 29 states and 11 coun­tries, call­ing out the prob­lems with the car­bon tax leg­is­la­tion they’ve been push­ing, which high­light­ed the fol­low­ing five points:

1) A car­bon tax will be insuf­fi­cient to move the mar­ket in a rel­e­vant time frame.

Cli­mate change is a gen­uine plan­e­tary emer­gency.  It’s already too late to pre­vent it, and the best we can do is min­i­mize and brace for its impacts.  Any strat­e­gy to reduce green­house gas pol­lu­tion needs to do so rapid­ly and deci­sive­ly with­in a man­dat­ed timeframe.

The mar­ket does not know best.  A car­bon tax relies on a mar­ket price to be enough to do the job in time, even though it would cov­er just part of the prob­lem, and would sure­ly set the price to low.  Set­ting a price on car­bon does not guar­an­tee that changes will be made in a mean­ing­ful time frame or that the changes will lead us toward clean solutions.

In 2012, Yvo de Boer, the for­mer chair of the Unit­ed Nations Frame­work Con­ven­tion on Cli­mate Change, stat­ed that we need a min­i­mum car­bon tax of 150 Euros per tonne (about $212/ton) to dri­ve the price sig­nals we real­ly need.  Cit­i­zens Cli­mate Lob­by (CCL) – the main advo­cates for a car­bon tax in the U.S. – sup­ports a $15/ton tax that increas­es $10/year, tak­ing 20 years to hit the min­i­mum lev­el need­ed to dri­ve change.  The Box­er-Sanders Cli­mate Pro­tec­tion Act of 2013 that CCL has been sup­port­ing, starts at $20/year and ris­es grad­u­al­ly to $34.49/year after 12 years and stays there, at a lev­el six times low­er than would be effective.

This is enough for politi­cians, Exxon and envi­ros to claim they’ve done some­thing, but woe­ful­ly inad­e­quate to actu­al­ly blunt the impacts of cli­mate change.

2) A car­bon tax ele­vates false solu­tionsBy only pun­ish­ing fos­sil fuels, a car­bon tax puts nuclear pow­er, “bio­mass” and waste incin­er­a­tion, land­fill gas burn­ing, and crop- and waste-based liq­uid fuels at a com­pet­i­tive advan­tage.  It even helps push “clean coal” and puts nat­ur­al gas ahead of coal, ignor­ing the methane impacts that make it worse than coal.  We can­not count on the mar­ket to pick the clean solu­tions (con­ser­va­tion, effi­cien­cy, wind, solar and ener­gy stor­age) over cheap, pol­lut­ing false solu­tions, most of which are worse than coal for glob­al warming.

Nuclear pow­er: Every­one from MIT to the Union of Con­cerned Sci­en­tists to indus­try con­sul­tants to the OECD Nuclear Ener­gy Agency seems to under­stand that a mod­er­ate car­bon tax would mean a nuclear indus­try wind­fall.  Sure, a lot of fos­sil fuels are used in the nuclear fuel chain, but a car­bon tax does­n’t ful­ly make up for the wind­fall nuclear pow­er will get as it’s put at a com­pet­i­tive advan­tage with fos­sil fuels, appear­ing cheap­er than coal for the first time.  A car­bon tax could include lan­guage to ban new nuclear reac­tors, phase out exist­ing ones, or accom­plish the same by repeal­ing the Price-Ander­son Act’s nuclear acci­dent insur­ance lia­bil­i­ty caps.  It won’t, though, because car­bon tax advo­cates won’t touch the issue.  Charles Komanoff of the Car­bon Tax Cen­ter admits: “The fact that a car­bon tax would cre­ate a price advan­tage for nuclear pow­er is regret­table, but that’s the way it is.”  Cit­i­zen Cli­mate Lob­by has rabid­ly pro-nuclear NASA sci­en­tist James Hansen on their advi­so­ry board and allowed him to be a keynote at their 2013 annu­al con­fer­ence, the same year when he’s push­ing nuclear pow­er in nation­al media.

Nuclear pow­er is the most expen­sive, sub­si­dized and slow-to-build form of pow­er and one of the most destruc­tive and racist.  It is a false solu­tion that releas­es radioac­tive air and water pol­lu­tion and sucks up all of the eco­nom­ic resources need­ed to tran­si­tion away from fos­sil fuels.  It chews up large amounts of land to bring ura­ni­um through four ener­gy-inten­sive steps of pro­cess­ing before it can be used in a reactor.

Car­bon tax advo­cates claim that we don’t need to wor­ry about nuclear because it’s too expen­sive to go any­where, and should be dealt with in sep­a­rate poli­cies (as if a sep­a­rate effort to “fix it lat­er” will have the sup­port of the car­bon-cen­tric advo­cates).  The fact is that nuclear pow­er is already the most heav­i­ly sub­si­dized ener­gy indus­try, enough that it’s already cost com­pet­i­tive with geot­her­mal and off-shore wind.  Half of fed­er­al ener­gy R&D went to nuclear pow­er over the past 65 years.  The Oba­ma admin­is­tra­tion is cur­rent­ly pro­vid­ing $8.3 bil­lion in loan guar­an­tees for two new reac­tors to be built in a black com­mu­ni­ty in Geor­gia.  Nuclear pow­er con­tin­ues to strug­gle eco­nom­i­cal­ly with­out big sub­si­dies and is stag­nant at the moment due to tem­porar­i­ly cheap gas prices, but car­bon tax among the back­drop of oth­er sub­si­dies would put nuclear back in the front seat.

Trash incin­er­a­tion is 2.5 times as bad for the cli­mate as coal, and is far worse by every oth­er mea­sure of pol­lu­tants as well.  New EPA loop­holes, as well as Obama’s Clean Pow­er Plan, are poised to allow coal plants and thou­sands of oth­er boil­ers to start burn­ing trash with­out reg­u­la­tion or com­mu­ni­ty noti­fi­ca­tion.  Car­bon tax­es ignore incin­er­a­tors, even though over half of the CO2 emis­sions from trash incin­er­a­tion are from the burn­ing of plas­tics and oth­er fos­sil-fuel-derived prod­ucts.  The world’s largest waste cor­po­ra­tion, Waste Man­age­ment, is poised to exploit this loop­hole and move from land­fill­ing waste to sky-fill­ing it by mar­ket­ing trash fuel pel­lets to every boil­er they can.  A car­bon tax (cou­pled with the Clean Pow­er Plan and EPA’s waste dereg­u­la­tion) will dri­ve this cli­mate-killing mass switch from coal to trash burning.

Bio­mass incin­er­a­tion is 50% worse than coal for the cli­mate, and claims of car­bon neu­tral­i­ty have been repeat­ed­ly debunked.  “Save the cli­mate, burn a tree” doesn’t make for a catchy cause, but forests in the U.S. are being logged for this “renew­able” pow­er, and are even being chipped and shipped (with fos­sil fuels) to Europe to be burned in con­vert­ed giant coal plants.  Ignor­ing “bio­genic” CO2 emis­sions is just anoth­er form a cli­mate denial.

That denial is strong in car­bon tax bills.

The Box­er-Sanders Cli­mate Pro­tec­tion Act of 2013 out­right makes grants avail­able to bio­mass and bio­fu­els that are “not sourced from food crops” (which would include burn­ing or liq­ue­fy­ing trees, grass­es, wood waste, ani­mal waste, trash, sewage sludge and oth­er wastes).  Tax­ing fos­sil fuels and putting the mon­ey into ener­gy sources worse for the cli­mate is as mis­guid­ed as it gets.

Con­gress­man Waxman’s draft bill also has clear sup­port for bio­mass.  Sec­tion 9(5) will prob­a­bly sub­si­dize bio­mass just as Sec­tion 201 of Box­er-Sanders does.  Sec­tion 11(b)(5) of the Wax­man draft specif­i­cal­ly exempts bio­mass.  Sec­tion 3 defines “cov­ered enti­ties” with ref­er­ences to 40 CFR 98, which specif­i­cal­ly instructs to “exclude car­bon diox­ide emis­sions from the com­bus­tion of bio­mass” when GHGs from bio­mass are cal­cu­lat­ed.  This flies in the face of science.

Recent sci­ence tells us that these “bio­genic” sources are not car­bon neu­tral in any mean­ing­ful time-frame – that it takes sev­er­al decades for wood burn­ing to become just as bad as coal if trees are grown and left alone to com­pen­sate for the extra CO2 released, and cen­turies to approach car­bon neu­tral­i­ty.  A 2009 study pub­lished in Sci­ence report­ed that mea­sures such as a car­bon tax applied to fos­sil but not to bio­genic emis­sions, would result in con­ver­sion of vir­tu­al­ly all remain­ing nat­ur­al forests, grass­lands and oth­er ecosys­tems to ener­gy crop mono­cul­tures by 2065.

Land­fill gas burn­ing for ener­gy is even worse than trash incin­er­a­tion, as organ­ic wastes are con­tin­u­al­ly fed to land­fills to become CO2 and methane.  CFCs and relat­ed intense­ly-potent glob­al warm­ing gas­es are also released by land­fills.  Burn­ing the gas for ener­gy, iron­i­cal­ly, caus­es more gas to escape the already piti­ful gas cap­ture sys­tems, mak­ing it worse to use for ener­gy than to just waste and flare the gas (even if coal were dis­placed by the small amount of pow­er gen­er­at­ed).  True zero waste solu­tions are need­ed, includ­ing keep­ing organ­ics out of land­fills, to tack­le this major methane source.  Land­fills are com­plete­ly ignored by car­bon tax pro­pos­als, except where they may be sub­si­dized as clean alter­na­tives, as renew­able ener­gy poli­cies already do.

Bio­fu­els are worse than petro­le­um for the cli­mate, neces­si­tat­ing that we stop try­ing to grow fuels (using nat­ur­al gas-based nitro­gen fer­til­iz­ers and oth­er fos­sil inputs), and move away from burn­able fuels altogether.

A grow­ing lit­er­a­ture demon­strat­ed that bio­fu­els are very inef­fi­cient to pro­duce and when full life­cy­cle assess­ments are com­plet­ed, many have a car­bon foot­print com­pa­ra­ble to, or worse than fos­sil fuels.  Because of the very large land area, soil, water and fer­til­iz­er require­ments to grow crops and trees for bioen­er­gy, most bio­fu­els result in vast, large­ly unac­knowl­edged car­bon and nitrous oxide emis­sions, deple­tion of soils and water resources, bio­di­ver­si­ty loss­es as well as con­flicts and human rights abus­es, includ­ing esca­lat­ing hunger due to food price increas­es.  Like bio­mass and land­fill gas, a car­bon tax both implic­it­ly and explic­it­ly pro­motes these false solutions.

It’s not easy to close these “bio­genic car­bon” loop­holes.  Car­bon tax­es focus on the extrac­tion phase (coal mines, oil refiner­ies and gas wells or dis­tri­b­u­tion hubs), so that they don’t have to try to mea­sure every smoke­stack and tailpipe.  This isn’t so eas­i­ly done with bio­mass and waste-based cli­mate pol­lu­tion.  Will these be treat­ed dif­fer­ent­ly so that smoke­stack pol­lu­tion is mea­sured?  Will trees cut be count­ed only when going to mar­kets that would burn them?  What about demo­li­tion waste and oth­er “bio­mass” har­vest­ed for burn­ing?  How would a car­bon tax mea­sure the “bio­genic” and fos­sil por­tions of trash incin­er­a­tion?  How would land­fills be account­ed for so that all gas (col­lect­ed or leaked) is count­ed, with­out encour­ag­ing land­fill gas burn­ing for ener­gy (which caus­es more gas leak­age)?  How would a car­bon tax ensure that organ­ics are com­post­ed and kept out of land­fills in the first place?  How to account for bio­fu­els?  It gets impos­si­bly com­pli­cat­ed, even with­out get­ting into the debate over how much to sub­tract out “bio­genic” car­bon that is sucked back up in the future as if any­one can guar­an­tee that those trees won’t be chopped back down for lat­er burn­ing or use.

Ignor­ing these emis­sions is not accept­able.  Mak­ing these dirty ener­gy cli­mate impacts invis­i­ble feeds the per­cep­tion that these ener­gy sources are valid alter­na­tives to fos­sil fuels, and fails to edu­cate car­bon tax advo­cates and the politi­cians they speak to.  Nuclear pow­er and incin­er­a­tion dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly impact low-income com­mu­ni­ties and com­mu­ni­ties of col­or.  Keep­ing their strug­gles invis­i­ble per­pet­u­ates the injustices.

Even Coal and Gas Supported? 

So-called “clean coal” could be sup­port­ed as some bills exempt car­bon cap­ture and seques­tra­tion (CCS) schemes that attempt to store CO2 under­ground infi­nite­ly.  Con­gress­man Waxman’s draft car­bon tax, as well as Con­gress­man Van Hollen’s car­bon “cap-and-trade with div­i­dend and auc­tions” bill both exempt CCS.  CCS is usu­al­ly cou­pled with enhanced oil recov­ery (EOR) schemes that use the CO2 to get more oil out of oil fields – oil that releas­es CO2 when burned.  The CO2 used to extract the oil also comes back up with the pro­duced oil.  Some CCS sites have already shown signs of the CO2 leak­ing out.  CCS loop­holes that enable con­tin­ued coal burn­ing (or oil extrac­tion) have no place in a cli­mate bill.

Even nat­ur­al gas may ben­e­fit from a car­bon tax, rel­a­tive to coal and oil, as the car­bon con­tent is low­er.  How­ev­er, this doesn’t account for the methane, which is 86 to 105 times as bad as CO2 for the cli­mate over a 20-year time frame.  Gas leaks from well to end use are exten­sive and cause gas to always be worse for the cli­mate than coal.  Cit­i­zens Cli­mate Lobby’s 2014 pol­i­cy pro­pos­al rec­og­nizes this and aims to account for it, but this fore­sight is unlike­ly to make it into any bill with a  change of pas­sage, as the gas indus­try is the government’s darling.

3) A car­bon tax could be regres­siveA straight car­bon tax would be regres­sive, impact­ing low­er-income house­holds hard­er than high­er-income ones, as Food and Water Watch recent­ly argued, cit­ing a Con­gres­sion­al Bud­get Office report.  How­ev­er, this flips around if the tax is returned to house­holds in a month­ly or quar­ter­ly div­i­dend check.  Div­i­dend checks are part of most car­bon tax plans.  This would be a pro­gres­sive wealth-redis­trib­ut­ing pol­i­cy that puts equal-sized checks in the hands of most U.S. residents.

One of the glar­ing errors in these poli­cies is that the div­i­dend checks would not go to all.  Mil­lions of the most poor and vul­ner­a­ble among us would be left out.  The Box­er-Sanders Cli­mate Pro­tec­tion Act of 2013 would – after rais­ing the costs of ener­gy and goods on every­one – pro­vide month­ly rebate checks only to “legal res­i­dents of the Unit­ed States.”  This would cause a dis­pro­por­tion­ate hard­ship on the near­ly 12 mil­lion undoc­u­ment­ed Unit­ed States res­i­dents whose work is fun­da­men­tal to our econ­o­my in impor­tant ways, from pro­vid­ing the food on our tables to car­ing for our chil­dren and elders.  Con­gress­man Van Hollen’s “cap and div­i­dend” bill does the same and seems to exclude even more peo­ple (those law­ful­ly here on tem­po­rary work visas, includ­ing many agri­cul­tur­al workers).

Envi­ron­men­tal Jus­tice demands that any approach to curb­ing emis­sions does not shift eco­nom­ic and envi­ron­men­tal bur­dens onto vul­ner­a­ble com­mu­ni­ties.  To their cred­it, Cit­i­zens Cli­mate Lob­by sup­ports div­i­dend checks going to all house­holds.  How to fix this, and who will speak up about it is anoth­er ques­tion entire­ly.  Per­haps CCL needs to make it a talk­ing point in their lob­by days.

4) A car­bon tax fails to ade­quate­ly cov­er all rel­e­vant sec­torsA car­bon tax fails to cov­er all crit­i­cal eco­nom­ic sec­tors that are part of the prob­lem and should be part of the solu­tion.  Ener­gy is a major cli­mate cul­prit, but the agri­cul­ture and waste sec­tors need to be a major part of a cli­mate pol­i­cy solu­tion as well.  It’s inad­e­quate to expect that the indi­rect impacts on these oth­er sec­tors will be enough to move them, and to do so in the prop­er direc­tion.  Same goes for trans­porta­tion, which is an ener­gy sec­tor, but also one that requires spe­cif­ic redi­rec­tion of pol­i­cy that a blunt tool like a car­bon tax can­not provide.

The trans­porta­tion bill annu­al­ly pumps tens of bil­lions of dol­lars into high­ways.  Known as the “high­way bill,” it allo­cates 80% of fund­ing for high­ways and auto-cen­tered infra­struc­ture, and 20% for tran­sit.  With­out revers­ing this annu­al allo­ca­tion, how can a car­bon tax tru­ly trans­form our car- and truck-cen­tric trans­porta­tion sys­tem into one cen­tered around bike-able and walk­a­ble com­mu­ni­ties and fare-free mass transit?

Same goes for the waste and mate­ri­als econ­o­my.  Solu­tions are far too nuanced to expect a car­bon tax to prop­er­ly lead us to a zero waste par­a­digm.  In 2006, EPA esti­mat­ed that pro­vi­sion of goods accounts for 29% of U.S. green­house gas (GHG) emis­sions, and that pro­vi­sion of food accounts for anoth­er 13%, total­ing 42% of emis­sions attrib­ut­able to mate­ri­als man­age­ment.  Con­sid­er­ing how EPA ignores bio­genic emis­sions from waste incin­er­a­tion, under­es­ti­mates GHG emis­sions from land­fills, and didn’t have the lat­est sci­ence on methane, this is sure­ly an under­es­ti­mate.  Min­i­miz­ing waste can reduce at least 37% of U.S. GHG emis­sions.  Since a car­bon tax doesn’t address methane, CO2, or CFC emis­sions from land­fills, or even the CO2 emis­sions from trash incin­er­a­tors, munic­i­pal offi­cials may react to a car­bon tax by cut­ting truck trips, drop­ping sep­a­rate recy­cling or com­post­ing col­lec­tion to save fuel and let the waste be buried (or burned, then buried), rather than see the larg­er picture.

Agri­cul­ture has the most promise to trans­form from being the largest cli­mate prob­lem to the largest cli­mate solu­tion.  As the recent Cowspira­cy doc­u­men­tary shows, ani­mal agri­cul­ture (to feed meat and dairy con­sump­tion) is the lead­ing cause of glob­al warm­ing, rain­for­est destruc­tion, land use, water use, water pol­lu­tion, and species extinc­tion, while con­tribut­ing to world hunger and numer­ous health prob­lems.  The film draws atten­tion to 2006 research by the U.N. Food and Agri­cul­ture Orga­ni­za­tion show­ing that the world’s live­stock con­tribute more to glob­al warm­ing (18%) than the world’s entire trans­porta­tion sec­tor (13%).  It then intro­duces 2009 research by ana­lysts at the World Bank Group show­ing that ani­mal agri­cul­ture, viewed more holis­ti­cal­ly, is actu­al­ly respon­si­ble for at least 51% of glob­al warming!

While this 51% fig­ure has been debat­ed back and forth, it seems more cred­i­ble than the low­er fig­ures, as it accounts for var­i­ous over­sights and also looks at methane’s impacts over a more rel­e­vant 20-year time hori­zon, rather than the 100-year fig­ure.  At the time of the study, methane was under­stood to be 20-some times as potent as CO2 over 100 years and 72 times over 20 years.  We now know, from more recent research, that methane is 35 times as potent as CO2 over 100 years and 86 to 105 times over 20 years.  Even if the 51% fig­ure (which the researchers say is con­ser­v­a­tive) is a bit inflat­ed, it’s also still under­es­ti­mat­ing the true impacts of methane.

No mat­ter how you cut it, ani­mal agri­cul­ture is the largest con­trib­u­tor to glob­al warm­ing.  Because much of the impact is from methane, reduc­ing meat and dairy con­sump­tion can have the most rapid effect on the cli­mate.  After all, methane has a 7–8 year half-life and per­sists in the atmos­phere for a short enough time to make a quick impact.  CO2, on the oth­er hand, per­sists for over 100 years, so reduc­tions in methane are far more impor­tant to avoid short-term glob­al warm­ing tip­ping points.

One U.N. agency, using the low­er GHG esti­mate for ani­mal agriculture’s impacts, stat­ed in 2010 that: “A sub­stan­tial reduc­tion of impacts would only be pos­si­ble with a sub­stan­tial world­wide diet change, away from ani­mal products.”

Car­bon tax poli­cies, even if intend­ed to cov­er methane, are like­ly to ignore agri­cul­ture as a sec­tor, focus­ing pri­mar­i­ly on COfrom fos­sil fuel sources.  Con­gress­man Van Hollen’s “cap and div­i­dend” bill specif­i­cal­ly exempts ani­mal agri­cul­ture.  A car­bon tax would dri­ve up the costs of food – most espe­cial­ly meat and dairy – due to high­er costs of oil and of nitro­gen fer­til­iz­er (which is pro­duced with huge amounts of nat­ur­al gas).  How­ev­er, the true glob­al warm­ing impacts of agri­cul­ture will be dras­ti­cal­ly downplayed.

Just as the trans­porta­tion bill puts mega-sub­si­dies into high­ways each year, the farm bill does the same for cor­po­rate agribusi­ness.  A car­bon tax that only par­tial­ly impacts this sec­tor won’t be enough to shift to the solu­tions we need.

Can regen­er­a­tive organ­ic farm­ing reverse cli­mate change?

2014 Rodale Insti­tute research shows that we can reverse cli­mate change with decen­tral­ized, local, no-till, organ­ic farm­ing using com­post, cov­er crops and enhanc­ing crop rota­tions.  These prac­tices, known as regen­er­a­tive organ­ic farm­ing, can sequester more than 100% of cur­rent annu­al CO2 emis­sions using wide­ly avail­able and inex­pen­sive organ­ic man­age­ment practices.

Cit­ing 75 stud­ies from peer-reviewed jour­nals, includ­ing its own 33-year Farm Sys­tems Tri­al, Rodale Insti­tute con­clud­ed that if all crop­land were con­vert­ed to the regen­er­a­tive mod­el it would sequester 40% of annu­al CO2 emis­sions; chang­ing glob­al pas­tures to that mod­el would add anoth­er 71%, effec­tive­ly over­com­pen­sat­ing for the world’s year­ly car­bon diox­ide emissions.

Even if mod­est assump­tions about soil’s car­bon seques­tra­tion poten­tial are made, regen­er­a­tive agri­cul­ture can eas­i­ly keep annu­al emis­sions to with­in the desir­able range nec­es­sary if we are to have a good chance of lim­it­ing warm­ing to 1.5°C by 2020.

For more info on this top­ic, see web­sites on “car­bon farm­ing” herehere and here.

We must replace ani­mal and indus­tri­al agri­cul­ture with farm­ing prac­tices like per­ma­cul­ture, bioin­ten­sive, and regen­er­a­tive organ­ic farm­ing.  It must be decen­tral­ized, with com­mu­ni­ty gar­dens, farmer’s mar­kets, and com­mu­ni­ty sup­port­ed agri­cul­ture becom­ing wide-spread.  It won’t be enough to focus on indi­vid­ual change (but you should still click the pre­vi­ous link and find a CSA near you!).  We need insti­tu­tion­al changes to encour­age all of these prac­tices and to replace the farm bills’ big ag poli­cies with these green solu­tions.  A car­bon tax will help a bit, but to tru­ly make this shift, we need to trans­form agri­cul­ture poli­cies and sub­si­dies, focus­ing in on the details of how to do it right.  As the Rodale report explains, it takes all of the pieces, not just some, for soils to become the car­bon sinks we need them to be.

Say what we want!

Blunt eco­nom­ic instru­ments won’t get us where we need to go.  We need to be blunt about what we want, and not expect “invis­i­ble hands” of the mar­ket­place to move us to wind and solar rather than nuclear and incin­er­a­tors, for exam­ple.  A real cli­mate pol­i­cy would man­date dras­tic (at least 75%) reduc­tions in demand through ener­gy con­ser­va­tion and effi­cien­cy through­out the econ­o­my, includ­ing a rever­sal in trans­porta­tion pri­or­i­ties.  It would man­date that the rest of our ener­gy needs be met by solar, wind and ener­gy stor­age.  It would set a nation­al zero waste pol­i­cy.  The Farm Bill would become an engine for a cli­mate-friend­ly regen­er­a­tive organ­ic agri­cul­ture sys­tem.  It would shift the $74 bil­lion in annu­al dirty ener­gy sub­si­dies, and most of the gigan­tic mil­i­tary bud­get into mak­ing these solu­tions pos­si­ble.  Final­ly, it would rad­i­cal­ly change our for­eign pol­i­cy from an impe­r­i­al war-based con­quest for our “eco­nom­ic inter­ests” into one of repa­ra­tions and sup­port for oth­er coun­tries to fol­low this path to clean solu­tions.  …and then I woke up:

5) Bet­ter solu­tions are more polit­i­cal­ly real­is­tic“Polit­i­cal real­ism” is not usu­al­ly part of my vocab­u­lary.  It’s the term usu­al­ly used by main­stream envi­ron­men­tal groups to jus­ti­fy why they’re sup­port­ing rather com­pro­mised leg­is­la­tion – because, after all, the cor­po­rate con­trolled state or nation­al leg­is­la­tors sim­ply aren’t ready to pass some­thing good, so we have to start with some­thing not-so-good because it’s the best we can get.  The promi­nent envi­ron­men­tal leader, David Brow­er, respond­ed to this best:

“Com­pro­mise is often nec­es­sary, but it ought not to orig­i­nate with envi­ron­men­tal lead­ers.  Our role is to hold fast to what we believe is right, to fight for it, to find allies, and to adduce all pos­si­ble argu­ments for our cause.  If we can­not find enough vig­or in us or our friends to win, then let some­one else pro­pose the com­pro­mise, which we must then work hard to coax our way.  We thus become a nucle­us around which activists can build and func­tion.” – David Brow­er

We must rec­og­nize that a car­bon tax is a non-starter, polit­i­cal­ly – though this can even­tu­al­ly change and is slow­ly shift­ing.  Near-term, how­ev­er, we’re not talk­ing about some­thing that can pass Con­gress.  Even a filthy cap-and-trade bill that we, Green­peace, Dr. James Han­son and oth­ers called “more harm than good,” couldn’t pass in 2009 when foun­da­tions poured about $1 Bil­lion into big envi­ro groups to push it.  …and that was before the Supreme Court’s Cit­i­zens Unit­ed deci­sion, the Tea Par­ty takeover of Con­gress and oth­er legal deci­sions that cement­ed cor­po­rate con­trol over the fed­er­al government.

So, the choice is between one polit­i­cal­ly unre­al­is­tic solu­tion and the oth­ers that we pro­pose, which wouldn’t car­ry the sev­er­al prob­lems that a car­bon tax would.  In 2009, a fed­er­al Renew­able Port­fo­lio Stan­dard (RPS) law almost passed Con­gress, and sim­i­lar laws have been passed in over 30 states.  That is far more polit­i­cal­ly viable than any tax mar­ket­ed as a “fee” – espe­cial­ly where any pro­gres­sive div­i­dend would sad­ly be red-bait­ed for its wealth redis­trib­ut­ing aspects.

RPS poli­cies are man­dates for util­i­ties to phase in a cer­tain per­cent­age of “renew­able” ener­gy in their mix.  While these aren’t defined clean­ly like they should be, they still man­date a shift to a new elec­tric­i­ty mix with spec­i­fied tech­nolo­gies in a clear time frame.  The leg­isla­tive struc­ture and polit­i­cal momen­tum is there.  The main prob­lem is ensur­ing that the con­cept of “renew­able” is defined clean­ly, being lim­it­ed to non-burn tech­nolo­gies, pri­or­i­tiz­ing con­ser­va­tion, effi­cien­cy, solar, wind and ener­gy stor­age.  Most state RPS laws (and fed­er­al bills) con­sid­er burn­ing trash, bio­mass and land­fill gas to be renew­able.  Some get worse, count­ing “advanced” nuclear pow­er, or the burn­ing of coal (in gasi­fi­ca­tion plants), waste coal, coal mine methane or tires.  These bad prece­dents in state laws have been pushed into fed­er­al bills and are like­ly to be rede­fined as “Clean Ener­gy” Port­fo­lio Stan­dards so that nuclear pow­er and coal mine methane is included.

…Which brings us to the prob­lem with doing any­thing at the fed­er­al lev­el.  Cor­po­ra­tions con­trol our gov­ern­ment.  They do this at all lev­els, but get­ting mean­ing­ful pol­i­cy passed with­out major com­pro­mis­es is only pos­si­ble at the local lev­el – and some­times at state lev­els, but they’re pret­ty cor­po­rate con­trolled, too.  It’s crit­i­cal to rec­og­nize that peo­ple pow­er is strongest at the local lev­el, and that social change comes from the bot­tom up.  That’s why we see suc­cess rates in our grass­roots base rang­ing from 60 to 99%, depend­ing on which indus­try is being fought, whether it be coal or gas-fired pow­er plants, nuclear reac­tors, land­fills or incinerators.

It’s unrea­son­able to expect top-down major nation­al leg­is­la­tion that isn’t so hor­ri­bly com­pro­mised that it begs the ques­tion of whether it’ll make any dif­fer­ence or do more harm than good.  That’s why we need to be push­ing for clean elec­tion reforms at all lev­els of gov­ern­ment.  It’s also why the move­ment and its fun­ders need to be putting more ener­gy into the grass­roots, where we’re dec­i­mat­ing entire indus­try sec­tors one com­mu­ni­ty at a time, rather than into top-down strate­gies that expect major changes out of a cor­po­rate-pup­pet Congress.

As our open let­ter to CCL stat­ed last year: “We must unshack­le our democ­ra­cy from cor­po­rate con­trol and polit­i­cal bribery before we can achieve suc­cess.  Mean­while, we must con­tin­ue to build our pow­er and advance the poli­cies and projects from the com­mu­ni­ty, munic­i­pal, state and region­al lev­els, which is what grass­roots orga­niz­ing has been doing for decades: shut­ting down and pre­vent­ing pol­lut­ing facil­i­ties from com­ing online at the source while cre­at­ing vibrant real solu­tions right at the com­mu­ni­ty level.”

­­­

Mike Ewall is founder and direc­tor of Ener­gy Jus­tice Net­work, a nation­al sup­port net­work for grass­roots activists fight­ing dirty ener­gy and waste facilities. 

 


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